If you've had health issues previously and the medical insurance company feels the chances are great that many more claims will be forthcoming from you, they can do one of several things...1) Not cover you under any circumstances, 2) Agree to cover you, but add an "exclusionary rider" to your policy that spells out what diagnosis and/or procedure codes that will never be covered during the life of your policy, 3) issue a waiting period before they will begin considering those particular claims (that's called a pre-existing clause), or 4) agree to cover you but charge you a higher premium because you are considered more of a risk. Of course, this is all regulated to a certain extent by each state's Dept of Insurance, and if you're being covered by an individual or group plan, or if a certain amount of time has passed since you were last covered, or if it's a group plan being offered by a new employer and you don't sign up for the insurance when you first become eligible for it, that insurance company can begin imposing all these restrictions on you as if it were an individual plan.
Has the policy been issued? Or, do you mean the payment with the application - conditional receipt? The conditional receipt explains the details. If policy issued, then immediately, as long as you are in the same health as when the application was made.
You either do not have this option activated and/or are outside of your network's coverage area.
Arad is a city from Romania, in the East of Europe. It should be " After Receipt of Approved Drawings"
I am not aware of a "legal amount of time", but if it appears to you that the amount of time that has lapsed is unreasonable, send the insurer a demand letter (certified/ return receipt requested). At least then you will be able to prove the passage of time when you solicit an attorney.
收据 (shou1 ju4) which appears more in written Chinese or formal ways发票 ( fa1 piao4) which appears more in spoken Chinese or informal waysIt can also be noted that 'shou ju' is just an invoice or informal receipt. 'Fa piao', on the other hand, is a government issued (approved) receipt.
ETIMS
I assume that you are asking when the policy goes into effect. The answer depends upon the nature of the authority that the insurer has given the agent. Many agents have "binding authority", which means that once the application is completed and the first premium paid, insurance goes into effect for a stated period of time. The agent will give you a receipt, called a "binder" which is essentially a temporary policy of insurance. In the case of auto insurance, assuming that the breadth of the coverage satisfies the law, you may generally use it to prove compliance with financial responsibility laws. If the agent does not have binding authority, such as in the case of many life/health agents, the coverage does not go into effect until the risk has gone through a process called "underwriting". This is a process done internally by the insurer to ensure that you (the risk) meets its underwriting criteria.
It is a negotiable bearer receipt issued by an approved Commercial or Investment Bank as evidence of a deposit placed with it for a fixed tenor at a specified fixed rate if interest.
railway receipt given by rly authority after receipt of payment railway receipt given by rly authority after receipt of payment railway receipt given by rly authority after receipt of payment
what is the receipt?
it is your father that is the receipt
The correct term is 'acknowledge receipt of'.